-
The Paris Navigo pass also gives culture discounts
Museums, theatres, gardens, cinemas, monuments…the capital’s transport pass can take you further
-
Calls for annual inspections of older cars in France strongly opposed by minister
The EU plan would affect millions of drivers in France if passed
-
Electric vehicles: Best electricity tariffs named by French consumer association
The group compared two popular EV models and considered six specialist EV offers
Jail for four-times limit lorry driver in Occitanie
A truck driver in Occitanie has been jailed for 10 months after being caught driving while more than four times over the legal blood alcohol limit, while also talking on his mobile phone.

Gendarmerie in Balaruc-les-Bains (Hérault) stopped the 41-year-old driver of the 38-ton truck at around midday on July 6, after noticing that he was driving illegally while on the phone.
The the driver’s state of drunkenness, and upon testing, discovered his blood-alcohol level was at 2.18 grams per litre of blood.
The legal driving limit in France is 0.5g/l.
that the driver was found to be driving on a probationary licence after a previous infraction, and the tracker on his truck revealed that he had a history of not respecting the legal limits for driving and rest times for truck drivers.
The driver was later discovered to have travelled from Valence (Drôme, Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes), and had been planning on travelling on to Saint-Martin-de-Crau in the Bouches-du-Rhône to drop off his truck, before returning home to the Haute-Savoie.
Instead, his licence was confiscated for a period of six months, and he was summoned to court.
He was to 10 months of prison - of which four months will be in a closed jail - followed by a suspended sentence.
His driving licence was cancelled and he will not be permitted to re-pass the test for another 18 months.
His previous conviction for drink-driving - a four-month suspended sentence handed down in the Haute-Savoie on February 13 2017 - was also taken into account and revoked in light of his more recent, more serious conviction.
Stay informed:
Sign up to our free weekly e-newsletter
Subscribe to access all our online articles and receive our printed monthly newspaper The Connexion at your home. News analysis, features and practical help for English-speakers in France